The Mercury (Pottstown, PA)

Chemical weapons inspectors get samples

- By Philip Issa

BEIRUT » Chemical weapons inspectors collected samples from Syria’s Douma on Saturday, two weeks after a suspected gas attack there followed by retaliator­y strikes by Western powers on the Syrian government’s chemical facilities.

The site visit, confirmed by the Organizati­on of the Prohibitio­n of Chemical Weapons, would allow the agency to proceed with an independen­t investigat­ion to determine what chemicals, if any, were used in the April 7 attack that medical workers said killed more than 40 people.

Douma was the final target of the government’s sweeping campaign to seize back control of the eastern Ghouta suburbs of Damascus from rebels after seven years of revolt. Militants gave up the town days after the alleged attack.

The U.S., France, and Britain blamed President Bashar Assad’s government for the attack, and struck suspected Syrian chemical weapons facilities one week later.

The Syrian government and its ally Russia denied responsibi­lity for the attack.

OPCW inspectors arrived in Damascus just hours before the April 15 strikes but were delayed from visiting the site until Saturday, leading Western officials and Syrian activists to accuse Russia and the Syrian government of staging a cover-up.

“I won’t find any hope in my heart until the Assad regime is held accountabl­e and eradicated from government in Syria,” said Bilal Abou Salah, a Douma media activist who left the town after the government takeover. He said he feared Russian and Syrian government personnel destroyed potential evidence in the two weeks since the alleged attack.

The OPCW said in a statement that it visited “one of the sites” in Douma to collect samples for analysis at agency-designated laboratori­es, adding it would “consider future steps including another possible visit to Douma.”

The OPCW mission is not mandated to apportion to blame for the attack.

A U.N. security team had scouted Douma on Tuesday to see if it was safe for weapons inspectors to visit. The team came under small arms and explosives fire, leading the agency to delay its mission.

Journalist­s visiting Douma the previous day, escorted by government minders, experience­d no security issues.

Russian ministry spokeswoma­n Maria Zakharova said the delays to the OPCW team were “unacceptab­le,” in a statement Saturday.

Douma is just minutes away from Damascus, where the OPCW team is based.

Images emerging from Douma in the hours after the attack showed lifeless bodies collapsed in crowded rooms, some with foam around their noses and mouths.

Abou Salah entered one of the buildings affected by the alleged gas attack the following day and took footage of a yellow cylinder with a gas valve on the top floor. He said it had crashed through the roof and showed a gash in the ceiling where it purportedl­y came through.

His assertions could not be independen­tly verified. But the cylinder looked like others identified by the internatio­nal NGO Human Rights Watch at other locations of chlorine gas attacks attributed to the government in 2016.

Raed Saleh, the head of the Syrian Civil Defense search-andrescue group, also known as the White Helmets, said Wednesday his organizati­on had shared the coordinate­s of the graves of April 7 victims with the OPCW, so that inspectors could take biological samples.

 ?? THE ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? Syrian regime forces Saturday oversee the evacuation by bus of rebels and their families from towns in the Damascus countrysid­e in a photo distribute­d by the Syrian government. The rebels and their families were bused to opposition territory in north...
THE ASSOCIATED PRESS Syrian regime forces Saturday oversee the evacuation by bus of rebels and their families from towns in the Damascus countrysid­e in a photo distribute­d by the Syrian government. The rebels and their families were bused to opposition territory in north...

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